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HomeCRM Good ERP relies on simplicity and standards, says study
Good ERP relies on simplicity and standards, says study
A new study indicates that many companies continue to
spend large amounts of money on their enterprise resource planning
(ERP) efforts because they've made their projects too complex.
In
a report to be issued publicly at the end of July, researchers at the
Hackett Group found that companies end up paying more when they fail to
maintain a straightforward approach with human resources and financial
software systems, both of which are considered part of ERP.
Specifically,
the researchers said that businesses building too much complexity into
those types of systems spend 30 per cent more per employee on finance
operations, and 18 per cent more per worker on human resources,
compared with companies that have simple strategies. The research group
said its findings were based on interviews with more than 2,000
companies.
Companies that work with a smaller
number of ERP vendors and reduce the amount of customisation in their
projects reap greater value from the applications, the Hackett Group
said.
The research firm added that companies
using the so-called best-of-breed approach in their ERP plans will
struggle to keep costs down, as that approach leads a company to use a
different vendor for each function. Businesses that engage in deep
application customisation may also struggle with costs.
"You
have to simplify the applications portfolio and also look inside the
software at how you can simplify there to truly reduce overhead," said
David Hebert, an analyst at the Atlanta-based Hackett Group. "With
customisation, companies have been adding quite a bit, and sometimes
not even tracking their work, which can make [ERP] very difficult to
support and especially hard to upgrade."
According
to Hebert, even those customers using only a couple of ERP vendors have
to keep a close eye on software pricing and internal customisation, as
some of the all-encompassing "enterprise suites" offered by companies
such as Oracle and SAP are very complex. Many companies also end up
running different versions of the same products made by such vendors,
which presents another challenge in keeping costs down, Hebert said.
The
Hackett Group's research contradicts the popular notion that utilising
so-called on-demand software, or hosted applications, offers an
immediate method of reducing cost and complexity. While some hosted
tools - web-based applications administered by an outside vendor - help
simplify certain functions, hosted providers typically don't provide
comprehensive ERP service. So going with hosted providers often means
the customer will end up using more vendors, which in turn makes
overall enterprise resource planning harder to manage, according to the
report.
"What's more important than adopting
hosted applications is driving to a more standardised, simplified (ERP)
model overall; if you can drive that through on demand, it can work,"
Hebert said. "To reduce costs, it's crucial to cut down on the number
of variables that you have to manage, and bringing on demand into the
picture still tends to add more complexity from that standpoint."
Hebert
said that one hallmark of the companies able to successfully reduce ERP
costs while still meeting internal goals is that those companies have
business leaders who understand the issues at play in installing and
maintaining the applications. The analyst said that chief information
officers must communicate openly with other executives about the impact
of changing business processes as their ERP projects develop over time.
"CIOs
are constantly faced with business leaders who truly believe that their
particular group or unit is different and has unique requirements, and
who will resist standardisation efforts, fearing they will lose their
competitive edge," he said. "IT leaders need to hold the line, sell the
value of standardisation and simplification, and at the same time be
aware of situations where a valid business cases exist to support
customisation."
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